US4241672A - Method of regulating the amount of underfire air for combustion of wood fuels in spreader-stroke boilers - Google Patents

Method of regulating the amount of underfire air for combustion of wood fuels in spreader-stroke boilers Download PDF

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US4241672A
US4241672A US05/966,523 US96652378A US4241672A US 4241672 A US4241672 A US 4241672A US 96652378 A US96652378 A US 96652378A US 4241672 A US4241672 A US 4241672A
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fuel
air
combustion
bed
fuel bed
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US05/966,523
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Kenneth L. Tuttle
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US Department of Energy
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23LSUPPLYING AIR OR NON-COMBUSTIBLE LIQUIDS OR GASES TO COMBUSTION APPARATUS IN GENERAL ; VALVES OR DAMPERS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR CONTROLLING AIR SUPPLY OR DRAUGHT IN COMBUSTION APPARATUS; INDUCING DRAUGHT IN COMBUSTION APPARATUS; TOPS FOR CHIMNEYS OR VENTILATING SHAFTS; TERMINALS FOR FLUES
    • F23L9/00Passages or apertures for delivering secondary air for completing combustion of fuel 
    • F23L9/02Passages or apertures for delivering secondary air for completing combustion of fuel  by discharging the air above the fire
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23GCREMATION FURNACES; CONSUMING WASTE PRODUCTS BY COMBUSTION
    • F23G7/00Incinerators or other apparatus for consuming industrial waste, e.g. chemicals
    • F23G7/10Incinerators or other apparatus for consuming industrial waste, e.g. chemicals of field or garden waste or biomasses
    • F23G7/105Incinerators or other apparatus for consuming industrial waste, e.g. chemicals of field or garden waste or biomasses of wood waste
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23LSUPPLYING AIR OR NON-COMBUSTIBLE LIQUIDS OR GASES TO COMBUSTION APPARATUS IN GENERAL ; VALVES OR DAMPERS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR CONTROLLING AIR SUPPLY OR DRAUGHT IN COMBUSTION APPARATUS; INDUCING DRAUGHT IN COMBUSTION APPARATUS; TOPS FOR CHIMNEYS OR VENTILATING SHAFTS; TERMINALS FOR FLUES
    • F23L1/00Passages or apertures for delivering primary air for combustion 
    • F23L1/02Passages or apertures for delivering primary air for combustion  by discharging the air below the fire

Definitions

  • renewable resources and particularly from renewable resource scraps or residues thereof.
  • One such energy source which is receiving increasing attention is the burning of wood and particularly wood residues, i.e., bark and wood scraps remaining from wood processing or forest wastes, to produce steam in boilers for process heat in factories, for space heating, and for generation of electricity.
  • Wood residue fuels are characterized by having a relatively high percentage of volatile matter, ranging from approximately 75% to 80% volatiles by weight, and often a relatively high moisture content, ranging from about 5 to 65% by weight.
  • wood residues include less solid carbon per pound of fuel than coal.
  • a method of metering underfire air for increasing efficiency and reducing particulate emissions from wood-fired, spreader-stoker boilers wherein a portion of the combustion air, approximately one pound of air per pound of wood, is fed through the grate into the fuel bed, while the remainder of the combustion air is distributed above the fuel in the furnace, and the fuel bed is maintained at a depth sufficient to consume all oxygen admitted under fire and to insure a continuous layer of fresh fuel thereover to entrap charred particles inside the fuel bed.
  • FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic view of a spreader-stoker boiler which can be utilized to perform the method of this invention
  • FIG. 2 is a graph showing the effect of different fuel bed depths on pounds per hour of particulate emission as the fuel feed rate is changed;
  • FIG. 3 is a graph showing the effect of different bed depths on grains per standard dry cubic foot of particulate emission as the fuel feed rate is changed.
  • FIG. 4 is a graph of carbon monoxide produced in the fuel bed for different fuel bed depths as the fuel feed rate of the furnace is varied.
  • the spreader-stoker furnace shown in FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of a typical furnace of this type.
  • This furnace 28 includes a porous grate 10 within chamber 11 on which a fuel bed 12 of wood residues is evenly distributed for combustion thereof.
  • Combustion air which is heated by the combustion products of the furnace in a heat exchanger 14 is supplied by a fan and duct system 15 and 16, respectively, to the furnace.
  • a portion of the air is supplied and distributed by valve 17 below grate 10 via duct outlets or vents 18 to provide the underfire portion of the combustion air.
  • the remaining air is conducted via duct 20 to ports 22 in the walls of furnace chamber 11 to a location above the fuel bed to provide the overfire portion of the combustion air.
  • the wood residue fuel is supplied through a chute 24 and a spreader 26 to the upper portion of grate 10 within combustion chamber 11 of the furnace 28.
  • the heat energy produced by combustion of the fuel material in fuel bed 12 may be utilized to produce steam in a heat exchanger 30, which steam may be carried via conduit 32 to some appropriate utilization means.
  • the heated combustion products may be passed through the heat exchanger 14 and emitted from a suitable stack 34 by fan 36.
  • the underfire air provided by vents 18 through grate 10 is used to provide sufficient oxygen to oxidize solid carbon in the fuel bed to carbon monoxide but insufficient to appreciably oxidize the same to carbon dixoide.
  • the volatile portion of the fuel is carried away by the underfire air into the combustion chamber 11 along with the carbon monoxide.
  • the overfire combustion air distributed in combustion chamber 11 by ports 22 is then used to complete combution of carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide and to burn the volatile portions distributed therethrough.
  • means may be provided (not shown) to remove the ash products from above and below the grate.
  • the fuel-layer depth may be monitored by any appropriate means such as by providing a window in the wall of the combustion chamber with an air supply to keep the window clear and by providing a depth indicator cooled by the underfire on the grate, such as by positioning a stainless steel or ceramic tube over one of the grate openings in the fuel bed. Electronic monitoring of fuel level using high frequency electro-magnetic radiation is also possible.
  • the amount of char and ash carryover from the fuel bed 12 may be substantially reduced by providing a sufficiently thick layer of incandescent char to convert all oxygen admitted underfire to carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide. This allows the bed depth to be an effective indicator of the underfire air/fuel ratio.
  • the fresh fuel is denser than the char and tends to hold down the char when less than fluidizing flows of underfire air are distributed through the fuel bed and the fuel particles also act as a filter.
  • the data point 44 in FIGS. 2 and 3 were measured using a fuel bed 1 inch deep which represents prior operating conditions with 50 percent underfire air.
  • the curves 46 in FIGS. 2 and 3 were measured using a 2 inch fuel bed while curves 48 represent a fuel bed 4 inches deep. It can be seen that as the bed depth increases, there is a substantial decrease (factor of 40) in particulate emission from a wood residue fired furnace. Measurements have also indicated that a wood residue fuel bed can be burned in a layer 6 inches thick in such a furnace arrangement with commensurate reductions in particulate emissions. It is noted that by increasing the fuel feed rate, an increase in the carryover rate of particulates occurs and that increasing the thickness of the fuel layer from 2 inches to 4 inches has the effect of reducing this carryover rate.
  • the effect on particulate emissions of fuel layer thickness increases as the fuel feed rate is increased.
  • the curve 50 for a 4-inch bed and a curve 52 for a 2-inch bed shown in FIG. 4 indicate that more carbon monoxide is produced in the 4-inch bed than the 2-inch bed. It is seen that a fuel bed several inches thick or more in a wood fired spreader-stoker furnace can be used to effectively meter the underfire air to reduce particulate emissions increase efficiency and increase the heating value of the gases produced in the fuel bed which become fuel for the overfire combustion. It is felt that a mininum thickness of 3 inches may provide the best results with a thicker layer being desirable if very high firing rates are used or if wood having greater than 50% moisture is distributed in the furnace. At a depth of greater than about 8 inches, the filtering effect may decrease and cease to exist.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Sustainable Development (AREA)
  • Sustainable Energy (AREA)
  • Solid-Fuel Combustion (AREA)

Abstract

A method of metering underfire air for increasing efficiency and reducing particulate emissions from wood-fire, spreader-stoker boilers is disclosed. A portion of the combustion air, approximately one pound of air per pound of wood, is fed through the grate into the fuel bed, while the remainder of the combustion air is distributed above the fuel in the furnace, and the fuel bed is maintained at a depth sufficient to consume all oxygen admitted under fire and to insure a continuous layer of fresh fuel thereover to entrap charred particles inside the fuel bed.

Description

BACKGROUND OF INVENTION
As the use of various energy sources increase, there are increasing demands to obtain energy from renewable resources, and particularly from renewable resource scraps or residues thereof. One such energy source which is receiving increasing attention is the burning of wood and particularly wood residues, i.e., bark and wood scraps remaining from wood processing or forest wastes, to produce steam in boilers for process heat in factories, for space heating, and for generation of electricity.
Wood residue fuels are characterized by having a relatively high percentage of volatile matter, ranging from approximately 75% to 80% volatiles by weight, and often a relatively high moisture content, ranging from about 5 to 65% by weight. In addition, wood residues include less solid carbon per pound of fuel than coal.
The conventional methods of direct combustion of wood residue fuels for industrial use have utilized either the Dutch oven type of design, a suspension burning design or a spreader-stoker design. Of these designs the major portion of newly constructed boilers are of the spreader-stroker configuration. Presently operating wood residue spreader-stoker boilers, which generally use a fuel bed depth of about 1 inch or less and about 6 or 7 pounds or underfire air per pound of fuel, have been troubled by relatively high emissions of ash and unburned char which is carried out of the combustion chamber. High particulate carryover rates generally result in difficulties in meeting emission standards unless extensive pollution control devices are connected to the boilers. Further, the high carbon carryover rates result in decreased combustion efficiency since the fuel value of the carbon is not utilized in the boiler or furnace.
The burning of wood residue fuels in such furnaces or boilers have required rather elaborate and expensive particulate collection systems to meet emission standards for continued operation. The collection system costs are normally a large portion of the capital costs in building one of these energy source systems. The economics of burning of wood residue fuels may thus be governed by the cost of emission cleanup equipment.
SUMMARY OF INVENTION
In view of the above, it is an object of this invention to provide a method of controlling combustion air flow to more efficiently burn wood or wood residue fuels.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a method for controlling combustion air flow to reduce particulate emission from wood residue fired furnaces.
It is a still further object of this invention to provide a method of firing a wood residue fired furnace which provides more complete combustion of the fuel with a concurrent reduction in particulate emissions.
Various other objects and advantages will appear from the following description of the invention, and the most novel features will be particularly pointed out hereafter in connection with the appended claims. It will be understood that various changes in the details, materials, and arrangements of the parts, which are herein described and illustrated in order to explain the nature of the invention, may be made by those skilled in the art.
A method of metering underfire air for increasing efficiency and reducing particulate emissions from wood-fired, spreader-stoker boilers wherein a portion of the combustion air, approximately one pound of air per pound of wood, is fed through the grate into the fuel bed, while the remainder of the combustion air is distributed above the fuel in the furnace, and the fuel bed is maintained at a depth sufficient to consume all oxygen admitted under fire and to insure a continuous layer of fresh fuel thereover to entrap charred particles inside the fuel bed.
DESCRIPTION OF DRAWING
The invention is illustrated in the accompanying drawing in which:
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic view of a spreader-stoker boiler which can be utilized to perform the method of this invention;
FIG. 2 is a graph showing the effect of different fuel bed depths on pounds per hour of particulate emission as the fuel feed rate is changed;
FIG. 3 is a graph showing the effect of different bed depths on grains per standard dry cubic foot of particulate emission as the fuel feed rate is changed; and
FIG. 4 is a graph of carbon monoxide produced in the fuel bed for different fuel bed depths as the fuel feed rate of the furnace is varied.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The spreader-stoker furnace shown in FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of a typical furnace of this type. This furnace 28 includes a porous grate 10 within chamber 11 on which a fuel bed 12 of wood residues is evenly distributed for combustion thereof. Combustion air which is heated by the combustion products of the furnace in a heat exchanger 14 is supplied by a fan and duct system 15 and 16, respectively, to the furnace. A portion of the air is supplied and distributed by valve 17 below grate 10 via duct outlets or vents 18 to provide the underfire portion of the combustion air. The remaining air is conducted via duct 20 to ports 22 in the walls of furnace chamber 11 to a location above the fuel bed to provide the overfire portion of the combustion air. The wood residue fuel is supplied through a chute 24 and a spreader 26 to the upper portion of grate 10 within combustion chamber 11 of the furnace 28. The heat energy produced by combustion of the fuel material in fuel bed 12 may be utilized to produce steam in a heat exchanger 30, which steam may be carried via conduit 32 to some appropriate utilization means. The heated combustion products may be passed through the heat exchanger 14 and emitted from a suitable stack 34 by fan 36.
The underfire air provided by vents 18 through grate 10 is used to provide sufficient oxygen to oxidize solid carbon in the fuel bed to carbon monoxide but insufficient to appreciably oxidize the same to carbon dixoide. As the fuel burns, the volatile portion of the fuel is carried away by the underfire air into the combustion chamber 11 along with the carbon monoxide. The overfire combustion air distributed in combustion chamber 11 by ports 22 is then used to complete combution of carbon monoxide to carbon dioxide and to burn the volatile portions distributed therethrough. It has been found that by providing approximately one pound of combustion air per pound of wood as underfire air with the remaining combustion air as overfire air (about 51/2 pounds of air to about 12 pounds of air per pound of fuel) will achieve this combustion while reducing the gas velocities at grate 10 through fuel bed 12 and thus minimize the entrainment of char particles in the combustion air.
It is noted that means may be provided (not shown) to remove the ash products from above and below the grate. The fuel-layer depth may be monitored by any appropriate means such as by providing a window in the wall of the combustion chamber with an air supply to keep the window clear and by providing a depth indicator cooled by the underfire on the grate, such as by positioning a stainless steel or ceramic tube over one of the grate openings in the fuel bed. Electronic monitoring of fuel level using high frequency electro-magnetic radiation is also possible.
It has been found that the amount of char and ash carryover from the fuel bed 12 may be substantially reduced by providing a sufficiently thick layer of incandescent char to convert all oxygen admitted underfire to carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide. This allows the bed depth to be an effective indicator of the underfire air/fuel ratio. The fresh fuel is denser than the char and tends to hold down the char when less than fluidizing flows of underfire air are distributed through the fuel bed and the fuel particles also act as a filter.
The data point 44 in FIGS. 2 and 3 were measured using a fuel bed 1 inch deep which represents prior operating conditions with 50 percent underfire air. The curves 46 in FIGS. 2 and 3 were measured using a 2 inch fuel bed while curves 48 represent a fuel bed 4 inches deep. It can be seen that as the bed depth increases, there is a substantial decrease (factor of 40) in particulate emission from a wood residue fired furnace. Measurements have also indicated that a wood residue fuel bed can be burned in a layer 6 inches thick in such a furnace arrangement with commensurate reductions in particulate emissions. It is noted that by increasing the fuel feed rate, an increase in the carryover rate of particulates occurs and that increasing the thickness of the fuel layer from 2 inches to 4 inches has the effect of reducing this carryover rate. The effect on particulate emissions of fuel layer thickness increases as the fuel feed rate is increased. The curve 50 for a 4-inch bed and a curve 52 for a 2-inch bed shown in FIG. 4 indicate that more carbon monoxide is produced in the 4-inch bed than the 2-inch bed. It is seen that a fuel bed several inches thick or more in a wood fired spreader-stoker furnace can be used to effectively meter the underfire air to reduce particulate emissions increase efficiency and increase the heating value of the gases produced in the fuel bed which become fuel for the overfire combustion. It is felt that a mininum thickness of 3 inches may provide the best results with a thicker layer being desirable if very high firing rates are used or if wood having greater than 50% moisture is distributed in the furnace. At a depth of greater than about 8 inches, the filtering effect may decrease and cease to exist.

Claims (1)

What is claimed is:
1. A method for reducing particulate emissions from wood residue fuel combustion on a pinhole grate in a spreader-stoker furnace comprising:
evenly distributing wood residue fuel feed over a fuel bed on said grate,
distributing an underfire portion of the combustion air equal to about one pound of air per pound of dry fuel to said fuel through said pinhole grate sufficient to convert the solid carbon in said fuel to carbon monoxide gas,
distributing an overfire remainder of the combustion air equal to from about 51/2 to 12 pounds of air per pound of air per pound of dry fuel above said fuel bed to complete combustion of said carbon monoxide gas and combustible volatile matter,
and maintaining said fuel bed at a depth equal to from about 3 to 8 inches sufficient to convert said carbon to carbon monoxide and to entrap char particles inside said fuel bed by providing a continuous layer of fresh fuel over the surface of said fuel bed with the depth of the fuel bed indicating that the correct amount of air is being supplied underfire to minimize emissions and maximize efficiency.
US05/966,523 1978-12-04 1978-12-04 Method of regulating the amount of underfire air for combustion of wood fuels in spreader-stroke boilers Expired - Lifetime US4241672A (en)

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Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1981002772A1 (en) * 1980-03-28 1981-10-01 Energy Inc Fluidized bed volume reduction of diverse radwastes
US4341515A (en) * 1981-02-11 1982-07-27 York-Shipley, Inc. High turndown ratio fluidized bed reactor and method of operating the reactor
FR2517025A1 (en) * 1981-11-25 1983-05-27 Fives Cail Babcock INSTALLATION OF SOLID FUEL BOILER
US4433631A (en) 1981-05-18 1984-02-28 Fluidyne Engineering Corporation Method and apparatus for producing a useful stream of hot gas from a fluidized bed combustor while controlling the bed's temperature
US4436057A (en) 1979-06-15 1984-03-13 Energy Equipment Co. Ltd. Method and apparatus enabling thermal energy recovery in combustor operation
US4535707A (en) * 1981-02-11 1985-08-20 York-Shipley, Inc. High turndown ratio fluidized bed reactor and method of operating the reactor
US4621583A (en) * 1985-06-28 1986-11-11 Measurex Corporation System for controlling a bark-fired boiler
US4708641A (en) * 1986-02-21 1987-11-24 Kraftwerk Union Aktiengesellschaft Waste removal system for problematic materials
US4852504A (en) * 1988-06-20 1989-08-01 First Aroostook Corporation Waste fuel incineration system
US4856460A (en) * 1987-05-09 1989-08-15 Inter Power Technologie Fluidized bed combustion

Citations (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1757401A (en) * 1926-05-24 1930-05-06 Thomas Stoker Company Apparatus for feeding fuel
US1831912A (en) * 1928-10-25 1931-11-17 Richard F Kehr Fuel conditioning apparatus
US1970523A (en) * 1929-04-01 1934-08-14 Richard F Kehr Stoker
US3190245A (en) * 1962-04-12 1965-06-22 Huntington Chemical Corp Apparatus for the heating of carbonaceous materials by their partial combustion to carbon dioxide
US3605655A (en) * 1970-05-05 1971-09-20 Fuller Co Method and apparatus for incinerating combustible wastes
US3680500A (en) * 1970-10-08 1972-08-01 Phillips Petroleum Co Two-stage smokeless incinerator
US3780676A (en) * 1972-05-08 1973-12-25 Air Preheater Metallic recovery system
US3792671A (en) * 1972-05-17 1974-02-19 Clean Air Ator Corp Incinerator with afterburner
US3822657A (en) * 1973-04-10 1974-07-09 C Midkiff Fuel feeding method and apparatus
US3847092A (en) * 1973-12-10 1974-11-12 Combustion Eng Automatic bed level control for furnaces
US3855950A (en) * 1973-10-10 1974-12-24 Consumat Syst Inc Automatic loading and ash removal system for incinerators
US3888194A (en) * 1973-11-21 1975-06-10 Babcock Hitachi Kk Method for incinerating industrial wastage
US4013023A (en) * 1975-12-29 1977-03-22 Envirotech Corporation Incineration method and system
US4102277A (en) * 1977-01-03 1978-07-25 Dorr-Oliver Incorporated Incineration of lime-conditioned sewage sludge with high sulfur fuel

Patent Citations (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1757401A (en) * 1926-05-24 1930-05-06 Thomas Stoker Company Apparatus for feeding fuel
US1831912A (en) * 1928-10-25 1931-11-17 Richard F Kehr Fuel conditioning apparatus
US1970523A (en) * 1929-04-01 1934-08-14 Richard F Kehr Stoker
US3190245A (en) * 1962-04-12 1965-06-22 Huntington Chemical Corp Apparatus for the heating of carbonaceous materials by their partial combustion to carbon dioxide
US3605655A (en) * 1970-05-05 1971-09-20 Fuller Co Method and apparatus for incinerating combustible wastes
US3680500A (en) * 1970-10-08 1972-08-01 Phillips Petroleum Co Two-stage smokeless incinerator
US3780676A (en) * 1972-05-08 1973-12-25 Air Preheater Metallic recovery system
US3792671A (en) * 1972-05-17 1974-02-19 Clean Air Ator Corp Incinerator with afterburner
US3822657A (en) * 1973-04-10 1974-07-09 C Midkiff Fuel feeding method and apparatus
US3855950A (en) * 1973-10-10 1974-12-24 Consumat Syst Inc Automatic loading and ash removal system for incinerators
US3888194A (en) * 1973-11-21 1975-06-10 Babcock Hitachi Kk Method for incinerating industrial wastage
US3847092A (en) * 1973-12-10 1974-11-12 Combustion Eng Automatic bed level control for furnaces
US4013023A (en) * 1975-12-29 1977-03-22 Envirotech Corporation Incineration method and system
US4102277A (en) * 1977-01-03 1978-07-25 Dorr-Oliver Incorporated Incineration of lime-conditioned sewage sludge with high sulfur fuel

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4436057A (en) 1979-06-15 1984-03-13 Energy Equipment Co. Ltd. Method and apparatus enabling thermal energy recovery in combustor operation
WO1981002772A1 (en) * 1980-03-28 1981-10-01 Energy Inc Fluidized bed volume reduction of diverse radwastes
US4341515A (en) * 1981-02-11 1982-07-27 York-Shipley, Inc. High turndown ratio fluidized bed reactor and method of operating the reactor
US4535707A (en) * 1981-02-11 1985-08-20 York-Shipley, Inc. High turndown ratio fluidized bed reactor and method of operating the reactor
US4433631A (en) 1981-05-18 1984-02-28 Fluidyne Engineering Corporation Method and apparatus for producing a useful stream of hot gas from a fluidized bed combustor while controlling the bed's temperature
FR2517025A1 (en) * 1981-11-25 1983-05-27 Fives Cail Babcock INSTALLATION OF SOLID FUEL BOILER
EP0080399A1 (en) * 1981-11-25 1983-06-01 FIVES-CAIL BABCOCK, Société anonyme Boiler using solid fuels
US4621583A (en) * 1985-06-28 1986-11-11 Measurex Corporation System for controlling a bark-fired boiler
US4708641A (en) * 1986-02-21 1987-11-24 Kraftwerk Union Aktiengesellschaft Waste removal system for problematic materials
US4856460A (en) * 1987-05-09 1989-08-15 Inter Power Technologie Fluidized bed combustion
US4852504A (en) * 1988-06-20 1989-08-01 First Aroostook Corporation Waste fuel incineration system

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